Issue #54: January/February 2017 Magazine Previous Issues The Fix This Is Your Brain on Poverty How behavioral economics is opening a creative new front in the fight against inequality. Karen Weese
Features Issue #54: January/February 2017 Magazine Photo Essays Previous Issues Radical Efforts to End Homelessness: Inside the Tent Cities of Seattle Personal stories from the residents of Tent City 3. Eirik Johnson
Issue #54: January/February 2017 Magazine Premium Previous Issues Since We Last Spoke Since We Last Spoke: School’s Out Updates to stories from the Pacific Standard archive. Dwyer Gunn
Guest Programmer Issue #54: January/February 2017 Magazine Previous Issues The Culture Pages Director Joshua Oppenheimer on Thinking Differently and Challenging Your Assumptions We spoke to Joshua Oppenheimer about what he recommends reading, watching, and listening to. Katie Kilkenny
Issue #54: January/February 2017 Magazine Previous Issues Primer There's a Name for That There’s a Name for That: Jevons Paradox The 19th-century British economist Stanley Jevons predicted—correctly—that the invention of more-efficient steam engines would lead to more coal getting burned. Peter C. Baker
Book Reviews Issue #54: January/February 2017 Magazine Previous Issues The Culture Pages What ‘Stand Your Ground’ Really Means A new book traces the legal history of self-defense in America—and shows how laws for self-protection have been generally reserved for whites. Peter C. Baker
Issue #54: January/February 2017 Magazine Previous Issues Primer Quick Studies ADHD Kids, Homeless Adults? New research adds an unexpected predictor of homelessness to an already-lengthy list. Tom Jacobs
Field Notes Issue #54: January/February 2017 Magazine Previous Issues Letter From Lesotho: Racism in the Diamond Mine Desperate for work, the Basotho miners of the sovereign kingdom of Lesotho grudgingly accept the daily degradations of life among the white men. Will McGrath
Field Notes Issue #54: January/February 2017 Magazine Previous Issues Field Notes: Where Migrants Crossed the Rio Grande Reynosa, Mexico: Fresh footprints of migrants dot the bed of a dried pond just south of Mission, Texas, near the Rio Grande. Pacific Standard Staff
Culture Features Issue #54: January/February 2017 Magazine Previous Issues The Culture Pages The Bones of St. Helena Two cinematographers are capturing the secret history of a South Atlantic island full of the bones of Liberated Africans. Diane Selkirk